Research priorities for burn nursing : patient, nurse, and burn prevention education

Fifteen of the 101 research questions that were assigned priorities in the Burn Nursing Delphi study by Marvin et al. (Marvin JA, Carrougher GJ, Bayley EW, Weber B, Knighton J, Rutan RL. Burn nursing Delphi study: setting research priorities. J BURN CARE REHABIL 1991;12:190-7) addressed education fr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of burn care & rehabilitation 1991-07, Vol.12 (4), p.377-383
Hauptverfasser: BAYLEY, E. W, CARROUGHER, G. J, MARVIN, J. A, KNIGHTON, J, RUTAN, R. L, WEBER, B
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container_end_page 383
container_issue 4
container_start_page 377
container_title Journal of burn care & rehabilitation
container_volume 12
creator BAYLEY, E. W
CARROUGHER, G. J
MARVIN, J. A
KNIGHTON, J
RUTAN, R. L
WEBER, B
description Fifteen of the 101 research questions that were assigned priorities in the Burn Nursing Delphi study by Marvin et al. (Marvin JA, Carrougher GJ, Bayley EW, Weber B, Knighton J, Rutan RL. Burn nursing Delphi study: setting research priorities. J BURN CARE REHABIL 1991;12:190-7) addressed education from the perspectives of patients, their families, and burn nurses; the study also addressed the issue of burn prevention education. Questions concerning patient education were assigned the highest priority in this education subgroup with respect to the potential for research that would have an impact on patient welfare. The question that rated highest as a priority for its potential impact on the profession of burn nursing addressed the core competencies needed for safe and effective burn nursing practice. Prevention education was generally found to be a low priority in the Delphi study. Many of the questions in the education subgroup can best be answered by comparative or experimental studies designed to explain and predict the effects of various teaching strategies on behavioral outcomes. Research on patient, nurse, and burn prevention education provides a fertile ground for nurse researchers and an opportunity to contribute knowledge of vital importance to clinicians, educators, managers, and the public.
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The question that rated highest as a priority for its potential impact on the profession of burn nursing addressed the core competencies needed for safe and effective burn nursing practice. Prevention education was generally found to be a low priority in the Delphi study. Many of the questions in the education subgroup can best be answered by comparative or experimental studies designed to explain and predict the effects of various teaching strategies on behavioral outcomes. 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subjects Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
Biological and medical sciences
Burn Units
Burns - prevention & control
Delphi Technique
Education, Nursing
Emergency and intensive care: burns
Humans
Intensive care medicine
Medical sciences
Nursing Research
Patient Education as Topic - methods
Surveys and Questionnaires
title Research priorities for burn nursing : patient, nurse, and burn prevention education
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